* [Executors][Distributed] custom executors for distributed actor
* harden ordering guarantees of synthesised fields
* the issue was that a non-default actor must implement the is remote check differently
* NonDefaultDistributedActor to complete support and remote flag handling
* invoke nonDefaultDistributedActorInitialize when necessary in SILGen
* refactor inline assertion into method
* cleanup
* [Executors][Distributed] Update module version for NonDefaultDistributedActor
* Minor docs cleanup
* we solved those fixme's
* add mangling test for non-def-dist-actor
CF_OPTIONS is defined differently in the SDK based on
a __cplusplus preprocessor branch. As a result, declarations
referencing CF_OPTIONS are mangled differently depending
on if C++ interop is enabled.
This meant a module compiled with cxx interop on could
not be linked with a module compiled without and vice versa.
This patch modifies the mangler such that the mangled names
are consistent. This is achieved by feeding the mangler a modified
AST node that looks like the Objective-C definition of CF_OPTIONS,
even when we have cxx interop enabled.
`__shared` and `__owned` would always get mangled, even when they don't have any effect
on ABI, making it unnecessarily ABI-breaking to apply them to existing API to make
calling conventions explicit. Avoid this issue by only mangling them in cases where they
change the ABI from the default.
This adds a new `primary_file` key, which defaults to `sourcefile`. For
nested expansions, `primary_file` should be set to the containing file
and `sourcefile` to the name of the macro expansion buffer.
Previously enum AccessLimitKind was
added to distinguish access scopes b/t package and public while keeping
DeclContext null but it proved to be too limiting. This PR creates package specific entries for DeclContext and
ASTHierarchy. It create a new class PackageUnit that can be set as the parent DeclContext of ModuleDecl. This PR
contains addition of such entries but not the use of them; the actual use of them will be in the upcoming PRs.
Resolves rdar://106155600
The macro role argument presented an opportunity for callers to accidentally
invoke this request twice for the same macro with slightly different macro
roles passed in, which resulted in re-typechecking the macro arguments.
Instead, derive the corresponding macro roles from the macro reference syntax.
- Remove the `Rewritten` field and `setRewritten()`. Make `getRewritten()` invoke the request.
- Rename fields `Macro` and `MacroLoc` to `MacroName` and `MacroNameLoc` respectively as well as their getters to match those in `MacroExpansionExpr`.
Extend the name mangling scheme for macro expansions to cover attached
macros, and use that scheme for the names of macro expansions buffers.
Finishes rdar://104038303, stabilizing file/buffer names for macro
expansion buffers.
- SILPackType carries whether the elements are stored directly
in the pack, which we're not currently using in the lowering,
but it's probably something we'll want in the final ABI.
Having this also makes it clear that we're doing the right
thing with substitution and element lowering. I also toyed
with making this a scalar type, which made it necessary in
various places, although eventually I pulled back to the
design where we always use packs as addresses.
- Pack boundaries are a core ABI concept, so the lowering has
to wrap parameter pack expansions up as packs. There are huge
unimplemented holes here where the abstraction pattern will
need to tell us how many elements to gather into the pack,
but a naive approach is good enough to get things off the
ground.
- Pack conventions are related to the existing parameter and
result conventions, but they're different on enough grounds
that they deserve to be separated.
When a declaration has a structural opaque return type like:
func foo() -> Bar<some P>
then to mangle that return type `Bar<some P>`, we have to mangle the `some P`
part by referencing its defining declaration `foo()`, which in turn includes
its return type `Bar<some P>` again (this time using a special mangling for
`some P` that prevents infinite recursion). Since we mangle `Bar<some P>`
once as part of mangling the declaration, and we register substitutions for
bound generic types when they're complete, we end up registering the
substitution for `Bar<some P>` twice, once as the return type of the
declaration name, and again as the actual type. This would be fine, except
that the mangler doesn't check for key collisions, and it picks
substitution indexes based on the number of entries in its hash map, so
the duplicated substitution ends up corrupting the substitution sequence,
causing the mangler to produce an invalid mangled name.
Fixing that exposes us to another problem in the remangler: the AST
mangler keys substitutions by type identity, but the remangler
uses the value of the demangled nodes to recognize substitutions.
The mangling for `Bar<current declaration's opaque return type>` can
appear multiple times in a demangled tree, but referring to different
declarations' opaque return types, and the remangler would reconstruct
an incorrect mangled name when this happens. To avoid this, change the
way the demangler represents `OpaqueReturnType` nodes so that they
contain a backreference to the declaration they represent, so that
substitutions involving different declarations' opaque return types
don't get confused.
`getValue` -> `value`
`getValueOr` -> `value_or`
`hasValue` -> `has_value`
`map` -> `transform`
The old API will be deprecated in the rebranch.
To avoid merge conflicts, use the new API already in the main branch.
rdar://102362022
Although the declaration of macros doesn't appear in Swift source code
that uses macros, they still operate as declarations within the
language. Rework `Macro` as `MacroDecl`, a generic value declaration,
which appropriate models its place in the language.
The vast majority of this change is in extending all of the various
switches on declaration kinds to account for macros.
This is the start of the removal of the C++ implementation of libSyntax
in favor of the new Swift Parser and Swift Syntax libraries. Now that
the Swift Parser has switched the SwiftSyntaxParser library over to
being a thin wrapper around the Swift Parser, there is no longer any
reason we need to retain any libSyntax infrastructure in the swift
compiler.
As a first step, delete the infrastructure that builds
lib_InternalSwiftSyntaxParser and convert any scripts that mention
it to instead mention the static mirror libraries. The --swiftsyntax
build-script flag has been retained and will now just execute the
SwiftSyntax and Swift Parser builds with the just-built tools.
We had two notions of canonical types, one is the structural property
where it doesn't contain sugared types, the other one where it does
not contain reducible type parameters with respect to a generic
signature.
Rename the second one to a 'reduced type'.
Local types are not ABI, and the only time we care about the mangling here is
when we look them up using the DWARF mangling in debug info, which doesn't
respect @_originallyDefinedIn either.
Fixes https://github.com/apple/swift/issues/59773.